Chadwick v. Campbell

115 F.2d 401, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4768
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 1940
DocketNo. 2107
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 115 F.2d 401 (Chadwick v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chadwick v. Campbell, 115 F.2d 401, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4768 (10th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

BRATTON, Circuit Judge.

Thomas D. Campbell sued the trustees of Sebilleta de La Joya Grant, and Charles D. Chadwick. The complaint contained two causes of action. One was in conventional form to quiet title to more than 215,000 acres of land in Socorro County, New Mexico; and the other was to cancel and satisfy of record an oil and gas lease covering such land, to recover damages for the clouding of plaintiff’s title by the execution and recordation of such lease, and to enjoin defendants from further clouding or interfering with the title of plaintiff. Plaintiff prevailed, and defendants appealed. For convenience, reference will be made to the parties as they appeared in the trial court.

The land was originally a part of the Sebilleta de La Joya Grant, a Spanish land [403]*403grant, hereinafter referred to as the grant. Plaintiff deraigns title under a tax deed issued by the treasurer of Socorro County for unpaid taxes assessed for the years 1923, 1924, 1925, and 1926. By judgment of the district court of that county, the amount of such taxes was established and the lien foreclosed; and by order subsequently entered, the treasurer was directed to advertise and sell the land. The treasurer accepted plaintiff’s bid, executed a deed, and reported the sale. The court confirmed the sale, approved the deed, and directed its delivery. Thereafter, the board of trustees of the grant executed and delivered to defendant Chadwick an oil and gas lease covering such land, and it was placed of record.

Section 223, chapter 133, Laws of New Mexico 1921, declares and makes subject to tax any interest or equity in land existing or accruing by, through or under a confirmed land grant originating from the Mexican or Spanish government; section 455 provides among other things that a tax deed shall be prima facie in any court in any suit or controversy respecting the rights of the purchaser, his heirs or assigns, that the land was subject to tax for the year or years stated in the deed, and that the taxes were not paid at any time prior to the sale; section 18, chapter 27, Laws of 1934, Sp.Sess. (§ 141-749 N.M. Supp.1938), is identical concerning the prima facie character of a tax deed; and section 24 (§ 141-755, supra), provides that in any suit or controversy involving title to property claimed and held under and by virtue of a tax deed executed by the treasurer, the party claiming adverse title to that conveyed by such deed shall, in order to defeat such title, be required to prove that the property was not subject to tax for the year or years named in the deed, or that the taxes were paid prior to the sale, or that the property was redeemed from the sale according to the provisions of the act, and that such redemption was made or had for the benefit of the persons having the right of redemption, and further, that fraud by the officer selling the land, or by the purchaser, shall be a defense. The provision in the statute that a tax deed shall be prima facie evidence that the land was subject to tax for the year or years named in such deed and that the taxes were not paid creates a rebuttable presumption. Cavender v. Phillips, 41 N.M. 235, 67 P.2d 250.

Defendants contend very earnestly that the grant was made to the Town of Sebilleta as a public corporation for certain specified purposes; that it was community or town grant; and that so long as it remained in community ownership it was not subject to tax by the state. Reliance is placed upon certain records in the office of the Surveyor General, at Santa Fe, New Mexico, to sustain the contention respecting the kind and character of the grant, The archives of that office contain a written application, dated May 25, 1819, signed by an attorney, a resident of Nuestra Señora de los Dolores de Sebilleta, made in the name of all the residents of such place, It is addressed to the Alcalde of the jurisdiction and requests a grant of the land which it is recited had been designated to them by certain boundaries and landmarks. A favorable recommendation by the local Alcalde is appended to such application, Then follows an order or decree signed by the Governor of the province of New Mexico, directing the Alcalde at Belen to assign the usual land to the petitioners, to cause them to place landmarks and boundaries, to draw up the proper documents, and having completed the undertaking to transmit a report to the Government for its knowledge and preservation. And the decree is followed, in turn, by a writing signed by the chief Alcalde of the jurisdiction of Belen that on June 4, 1819, he went to the settlement of Sebilleta and ordered to be assembled sixty-seven named persons constituting all the residents and inhabitants of the town, that they accepted the grant, that he gave them possession of it, that he ordered them to place landmarks, and that they did so. The Surveyor General certified in writing under date of November 14, 1874, that the muniments of title of a tract of land embracing the town and vicinity of Cevilleta were found among the archives of the Mexican Government at Santa Fe when the United States took possession of the country in 1846 and were transferred to his office in 1855; that he entertained no doubt of the validity and sufficiency of the claim to the land, and he recommended that it be confirmed by the Congress. But no action having been taken, the claim was submitted to the Court of Private Land Claims, a tribunal created by the Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 854. The court in 1893 made findings of fact and entered its order, judgment and decree that title to the land be established and confirmed in the sixty-seven named [404]*404persons who had been placed in possession thereof by the Alcalde, and “to their heirs, assigns and legal representatives”. And a patent was issued in 1907. It recites that, under the act creating the Court of Private Land Claims, the claim of the sixty-seven named persons had been duly established “to private land grant known as the Sevilleta Grant”, and the conveyance runs to such persons by name, “and to their heirs and assigns forever”.

Neither the records in the office of the Surveyor General, nor the decree of the Court of Private Land Claims, nor the patent, refers to the grant as a community or town grant made to the Town of Sebilleta as- a public corporation. None of these indicates that it was a grant of that kind, as distinguished from a private grant. On the contrary, the language in the decree establishing arid confirming title in the individuals named, and their heirs, assigns and legal representatives, and the language in the patent conveying title to such individuals, and their heirs and assigns, reject the view that it was such a grant. More than that, the patent expressly refers to it as a private grant. There is no room for doubt that the decree' established and confirmed title in the individuals as a private grant, and that the patent conveyed the land to them as a grant of that kind, not a town or community grant for specified community purposes.

By the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo of February 2, -1848, 9 .Stat. 922, 929, the United States acquired the right of property in all of the public lands of that portion of New Mexico which was ceded to this country. And while private rights of property within the ceded territory were unaffected by the change . in sovereignty, the duty of providing the mode of securing such rights and of fulfilling the obligations imposed upon the United States in protecting them under its treaty obligations belonged to Congress; and Congress was free to discharge the duty itself or to delegate it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 F.2d 401, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chadwick-v-campbell-ca10-1940.